How to Restore the Finish on an Antique Table

7Comments

I completed a restoration project by simply watching your video. Very informative and made my Hammary writing desk jump back to life! Thanking you all the way from Oahu Hawaii it's a great feeling to bring back a piece of furniture that now will be used by my daughters.

Jose

Aug 26, at 12:04am

7Comments

Please USE GLOVES when working with chemicals! It freaked me out so bad when you were using chemicals with no gloves that I could hardly concentrate on your video. Beautiful piece, but SAFETY needs to be a priority. Otherwise, something bad can happen and we wouldn't be able to enjoy anymore videos.

Kat

Jun 5, at 8:30pm

7Comments

The denatured alcohol melted the old shellac. You can use a dull scraper and more alcohol to remove the shellac entirely. Then polyurethane. This video is misleading if you're working on furniture varnished with shellac which most of it is. The denatured alcohol will always melt it and you can't just wipe briefly and apply stain.

Ed wood

Jun 19, at 2:05am

7Comments

Great job !!! Now I feel inspire to do wood restoration :)

M Salas

Jun 15, at 12:20pm

7Comments

I used this technique on a mid century piece and it did not work as advertised. For some reason when I wiped on the mineral spirits then wiped off the mineral spirits with the denaturalised alcohol it left a terrible smear. Can anyone tell me why this happened? I am probably going to end up sanding down the entire dining set now. I think they should have explained at the beginning that it does not work with everything.

Aaron

Mar 3, at 10:12pm

7Comments

I purchased an old solid cherry coffetable at auction. I removed all the old finish but there seems to be black spots (mold??) on one section where the old finish seemed to have had water left on it. I sanded the table and stained it but the spots keep coming up. Any suggestions. Thanks, Maggie